OU News

News from The Open University

OU research student Lois in the lab at Milton Keynes

Meet the OU researcher using sunlight to create clean water

When Lois Damptey left her home in Ghana to study for a PhD with The Open University, she had one clear goal: for her research to help save lives. Now in the final year of her doctorate, Lois, 30, is exploring how solar energy can be used to create a low-cost water filtration system. The […]

Read more about Meet the OU researcher using sunlight to create clean water

Ukraine: why supply of US and German tanks echoes cold war

Ukraine: why supply of US and German tanks echoes cold war

Dr David Grummitt is an Open University staff tutor in history and a military historian. Here he talks about Germany’s latest decision to allow its Leopard 2 tanks to be exported to Ukraine and what it could mean. The decision that Germany and the US will allow the export of M1 Abrams and Leopard 2 […]

Read more about Ukraine: why supply of US and German tanks echoes cold war

Remarkable ancient find of an extinct language goes on public display

Remarkable ancient find of an extinct language goes on public display

A 2,500-year-old stone slab found in Italy and inscribed in the ancient, extinct Etruscan language is now on show to the public for the first time. But you’ll have to venture to the Fondazione Luigi Rovati museum in Milan to see The Vicchio Stele, as it is called, which was discovered in 2015 by a […]

Read more about Remarkable ancient find of an extinct language goes on public display

Latest Webb telescope results uncover dark, icy beginnings of life’s building blocks

Latest Webb telescope results uncover dark, icy beginnings of life’s building blocks

The discovery of diverse ices in the darkest, coldest regions of a molecular cloud ever measured has been announced by an international team of astronomers – including from the OU – using the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. This result, published today in Nature allows astronomers to examine the simple icy molecules and open a […]

Read more about Latest Webb telescope results uncover dark, icy beginnings of life’s building blocks

“Can’t talk. It’s not safe, I’m driving”

“Can’t talk. It’s not safe, I’m driving”

New research led by the OU aims to improve road safety by challenging the perception that hands-free phone use by drivers is ‘safe’. Latest government figures show that by the close of 2021, 20 people were killed and 616 injured in collisions in Great Britain where mobile phone use was recorded as a contributory factor. […]

Read more about “Can’t talk. It’s not safe, I’m driving”

OU research student Lois in the lab at Milton Keynes

OU researcher wins prestigious award for her work to empower rural schools in Ghana

Lois Damptey, a PhD student in the School of Engineering and Innovation at the Open University (OU) has won a ‘Youth Excellence award in Science and Engineering’ in Ghana. Lois’ PhD is funded by the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF). Under the supervision of Professor Satheesh Krishnamurthy, Prof N.S. Braithwaite and Prof Vasant Kumar (from […]

Read more about OU researcher wins prestigious award for her work to empower rural schools in Ghana

OU space researcher wins prestigious Japanese Fellowship to investigate the Mars atmosphere

OU space researcher wins prestigious Japanese Fellowship to investigate the Mars atmosphere

Juan Alday, a scientist in the ExoMars research group at The Open University (OU), has been awarded a research fellowship by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) to study the atmosphere of Mars. Juan will be conducting research at the University of Tokyo for nine months to better understand the isotope composition […]

Read more about OU space researcher wins prestigious Japanese Fellowship to investigate the Mars atmosphere

‘A special school’ airs on BBC Two, BBC Cymru Wales and iPlayer

‘A special school’ airs on BBC Two, BBC Cymru Wales and iPlayer

Two academics from The Open University used their specialist skills to advise the BBC programme makers on a second series of A Special School, which airs on BBC Two on 20th February at 7pm. The three-part series goes behind the scenes in a compelling observational documentary that shows what is possible when boundaries are pushed. […]

Read more about ‘A special school’ airs on BBC Two, BBC Cymru Wales and iPlayer

Sexual misconduct in the UK Parliament – research shows pathway to change

Sexual misconduct in the UK Parliament – research shows pathway to change

A first-of-its-kind research book shines a light on the experiences of women who have been affected by sexual misconduct while working in the UK Parliament. The research looks at what could be done to create the conditions for change and gives voice to many whistle-blowers and survivors of sexual harassment who bravely shared their stories. […]

Read more about Sexual misconduct in the UK Parliament – research shows pathway to change

New framework for nursery practitioners shaped by OU research

New framework for nursery practitioners shaped by OU research

Research by Dr Natalie Canning, Senior Lecturer of Early Childhood and Co-Director of The Open University’s (OU) Children’s Research Centre has helped shape a new framework for early childhood practitioners. Created in partnership with the Interactive Learning Diary, the ‘Empowerment Framework’ can be used by practitioners to observe and analyse children’s play and activities to […]

Read more about New framework for nursery practitioners shaped by OU research

Page 56 of 235